Granola: The $1.5B AI Notepad That Makes Privacy Your Homework
June 30, 2026 · 10:18 AM

Granola: The $1.5B AI Notepad That Makes Privacy Your Homework

Granola sells bot-free AI meeting notes as effortless workplace memory. The evidence says the real product is useful, but the catch is ugly: invisible recording norms, link-sharing defaults, opt-out model training, and governance controls that turn a simple notepad into privacy homework.

Granola has the perfect pitch for the modern meeting hostage: sit there, nod like a serious operator, type three scraps into a notepad, and let AI turn the whole room into polished memory. No bot barges into the Zoom. No awkward Otter rectangle announces that someone decided to preserve everyone forever. Just a quiet desktop app promising "Notes, actions and memory. Without a meeting bot." 1
That pitch is apparently worth unicorn money now. Bloomberg reported in March 2026 that Granola was raising $125 million at a $1.5 billion valuation, led by Index Ventures. 2 We are no longer just funding models that hallucinate. We are funding meeting notes that make everyone in the room quietly wonder, "Wait, am I being recorded right now?"

The hype pitch: invisible meeting memory for people who cannot escape meetings

Granola does not sell itself as another transcription bucket. It sells taste. The homepage calls it "The AI notepad for back-to-back meetings," available on macOS, Windows, and iPhone, and says it works with Zoom, Google Meet, Teams, and "every other meeting app." 1 The product story is clean: write whatever you think matters, then Granola transcribes in the background and turns those scraps into structured notes, action items, follow-ups, and searchable memory.
The company has been deliberate about the anti-bot angle. In its Series A announcement, Granola said the problem with many AI note-takers is that they build for a world where the human is removed and replaced by an AI bot. Granola's answer was an AI-powered notepad where you jot the things that matter, the app transcribes in the background, and AI "fleshes out" the notes after the meeting. 3
That is a good product insight. Bot notetakers are socially weird. Everyone has sat through the little ritual where "Fathom Notetaker" or "Otter Assistant" joins the call and the energy drops. Granola makes the tool feel more like Apple Notes with a transcript engine taped underneath.
VCs ate the bowl. Granola announced a $20 million Series A in October 2024, saying weekly users had grown 6x since launch and that half of people who tried Granola were still using it 10 weeks later. 3 TechCrunch later reported that Granola raised $43 million at a $250 million valuation in May 2025, with co-founder Chris Pedregal saying users were increasingly keeping Granola open all day. 4
By 2026, the pitch had swollen from "better meeting notes" into "your workplace memory layer." The homepage says Granola can prep a Brief before external meetings and handle post-meeting admin after the call. 1 In startup dialect, this is called context. In human dialect, this is called keeping a private searchable archive of conversations and hoping everyone is cool about it.

Reality check: the best feature creates the biggest trust problem

The no-bot design is Granola's killer feature. It is also the moral trapdoor.
Granola's security page says the app has to be manually started for a meeting, then accesses your microphone audio and your meeting audio on the computer, transcribes it, and does not add a bot to the video call. 5 That means the product neatly removes the social signal that usually tells other people, "This meeting is being captured by a third-party AI tool."
Granola can argue, fairly, that the user controls whether to start it. The problem is that the room does not control whether the user is quietly building a transcript. That is the entire UX advantage.
Real users have already run into the human version of the problem. In a July 2025 Reddit thread about AI notetakers at work, a Granola user said their team "didn't like the idea of being recorded" and that a coworker asked to be told before every meeting when Granola was being used. 6 That is not some Luddite overreaction. That is the predictable result of a product whose main flex is being less visible than the old bots.
The company seems to know this is sensitive. Its pricing page reserves "Org-wide notification that Granola is being used" for Enterprise, the $35-per-user-per-month plan. 7 Translation: at consumer and small-team scale, the etiquette layer is mostly on you. Congratulations, you bought an AI assistant and received a workplace consent policy as DLC.

The privacy homework is not a footnote

The company says third parties such as OpenAI and Anthropic are not allowed to train on users' personal data, audio recordings are not stored after transcription, and notes are encrypted at rest and in transit. 5 Good. Adults did some security work.
Then comes the part where the adulting gets outsourced back to the user.
Granola's model-training doc says that by default the company may use anonymized data to improve its services, that users can opt out in settings, and that Enterprise customers are opted out organization-wide by default. 8 Its privacy policy says Granola may create de-identified data from personal data and use it to analyze, build, and improve the services, including training AI models that support the services. 9
That is not "your meetings are being shipped raw to OpenAI for lunch." Granola explicitly says that is not happening. But for a product that records the messy guts of work, "you can opt out" is doing a lot of unpaid labor. Sensitive meetings contain hiring judgments, customer problems, pricing pressure, roadmap mistakes, legal gray zones, and the occasional executive saying the quiet part into a microphone.
The share-link story is worse. The Verge reported in April 2026 that Granola notes were viewable by anyone with a link by default, and that the app also enabled AI training by default for non-enterprise users. It could open its own note from a private browser window without signing in, though it could not view the entire transcript. 10
Granola co-founder Sam Stephenson told The Verge the links work like Dropbox links: unlisted, created when the user chooses to share, invisible to search engines, with full transcripts never accessible unless a note is explicitly shared. 10 Fine. But "Dropbox-style sharing" is a tradeoff. A link can leak. A forwarded note can outlive the meeting. A summary can reveal enough even when the full transcript is locked.
Reddit found the same nerve. One post warned Granola users that "EVERY note you create has a shareable link" by default and claimed that switching future settings to private would not retroactively lock earlier notes, telling users to audit old notes one by one. 11 A commenter called it "a data security + privacy setting overlook" that Granola should fix. 11
This is the roast's main course: Granola sells invisible convenience, then hands you a settings checklist so your invisible convenience does not become an invisible leak.

The product is useful, which makes the trap more annoying

The annoying part is that Granola is not trash. The public feedback is mostly positive. Product Hunt lists Granola at 4.8 stars across 49 reviews, and its own AI summary says users praise the structured output, search, cross-meeting recall, in-person and online meeting support, and the absence of a meeting bot. 12
That same Product Hunt page lists the little cracks: no Android app, iPad and iOS capture limits, account setup friction, occasional UI lag, and more integrations requested. 12 Every SaaS app has a backlog graveyard where Android users go to die.
The more structural limitation is baked into the privacy-friendly design. Granola says it does not store meeting audio and only stores the transcript and notes. 5 That sounds clean until the transcript is wrong and the meeting mattered. No recording means there is no audio replay to check whether the VP said "we can ship in August" or "we cannot ship in August." In low-stakes meetings, who cares. In legal, sales, hiring, finance, or customer escalation calls, that missing rewind button is not a feature. It is a liability wearing a linen shirt.
And because Granola wants to be more than a note taker, the blast radius grows with success. TechCrunch reported that Granola was launching collaboration features for sharing transcripts and notes with teammates, creating custom folders for sales, customer feedback, and hiring, and letting non-users chat with its AI about notes. 4 That is useful. It is also how a private note app quietly becomes a company memory database assembled from recorded conversations.
The pricing tells you where this is going. Basic is free with limited meeting history. Business is $14 per user per month with unlimited meeting notes and history, advanced integrations, user management, API access, and MCP integration. Enterprise is $35 per user per month with SSO, admin controls, deletion periods, org-wide model-training opt-out, and org-wide usage notification. 7 The more you care about governance, the more you are looking at the expensive tier.

Verdict: great notes, ugly social contract

Granola's actual product is easy to understand: it is a polished AI notepad that removes the visible meeting bot, improves notes, and builds searchable memory from the conversations you were already having. That is why people like it. That is why investors keep writing checks. That is why it can plausibly become a daily habit for founders, VCs, sales teams, recruiters, and anyone else trapped in calendar purgatory.
What you were sold, though, is cleaner than what you are buying. The marketing pitch is "stay present." The reality is "start transcribing, manage disclosure, review link-sharing defaults, decide whether model training should be off, and hope the transcript is good because the audio is gone." That is a lot of chores for a bowl of startup cereal.
If you use Granola alone for low-stakes meetings, it may be excellent. If your team uses it across customer calls, hiring loops, strategy meetings, or anything confidential, the no-bot magic becomes the problem. The product removes friction from the person recording, then redistributes that friction to everyone else as trust debt.
So the verdict is simple: Granola is not a scam. It is a very good meeting notepad with a $1.5 billion expectation problem and a privacy UX that asks users to clean up after the growth story. The notes may be beautiful. The social contract is still a sticky mess at the bottom of the bowl.

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